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Cavs owner Gilbert awake after stroke, CEO says

Published in Basketball
Monday, 27 May 2019 19:44

Cleveland Cavaliers owner Dan Gilbert is "awake, responsive and resting comfortably" after suffering a stroke Sunday, according to a Jay Farner, the CEO of Quicken Loans, the company Gilbert founded and chairs.

Farner said in a statement that Gilbert, 57, felt ill on Sunday and a friend took him to a Detroit-area hospital, where he suffered the stroke. Farner said Gilbert was taken in for a catheter-based procedure and was moved to recovery in the ICU.

Monday's update to Gilbert's condition came after a statement Sunday said he had been hospitalized because of "stroke-like symptoms."

"Dan is awake, responsive and resting comfortably. Dan and his family are immensely grateful to the doctors and nurses whose early intervention is already paying dividends toward his recovery," Farner said. "We will update the public as additional details become known."

Gilbert has owned the Cavaliers since March 2005. Under his stewardship, Cleveland has made five NBA Finals and won the title in 2016.

Machado on Bronx jeers: Great players get booed

Published in Baseball
Monday, 27 May 2019 18:21

NEW YORK -- Yankees fans drubbed Manny Machado with the same intensity Clint Frazier, Brett Gardner and Gary Sanchez pounded the baseball.

The $300 million infielder was greeted with loud boos and chants of "Over-rated!" on Monday in his first visit to New York since free agency. Machado went 1 for 4 with a too-little, too-late leadoff double in the ninth inning during the Yankees' 5-2 victory over the San Diego Padres, the eighth win in nine games for the AL East leaders.

"You're in New York. I get booed everywhere I go," Machado said. "Great players get booed."

Machado struck out, popped out and hit into a double-play grounder in his first three at-bats, pleasing the Bleacher Creatures. He wouldn't judge whether the salutation was louder than elsewhere.

"How can you compare? A boo's a boo," he said during a sometimes terse 3 1/2-minute postgame media session.

A four-time All-Star with division rival Baltimore before he was dealt to the Los Angeles Dodgers last summer, Machado was interested in playing for the Bronx Bombers after becoming a free agent last fall and dined with Yankees officials in December in hopes of becoming their third baseman. New York did not bite, and Machado signed a $300 million, 10-year contract with the Padres in late February.

New York's third basemen have 30 RBI this year, four more than Machado. Yankees manager Aaron Boone thought the reception was predictable.

"More a tribute to what a good player Manny is," he said.

San Diego became the last opposing team to play at new Yankee Stadium, which opened in 2009, and quickly gained firsthand knowledge of its homer-friendly dimensions

Matt Strahm (2-4) struck out a career-high 10 in six innings but wasted a 2-0 lead in the Yankees' three-run second.

Frazier tied it with his 10th homer, a no-doubt drive over the left-field scoreboard. Gio Urshela walked and Gardner hit a 352-foot fly over the right field short porch, leading Strahm to slam his glove against a thigh in anger. Sanchez added his 16th homer off Craig Stammen in a two-run eighth, an opposite-field shot measured at 353 foot over the short porch.

"I think everybody kind of knows Yankee Stadium, how short right field is," Machado said. "You definitely saw that today with Gary. That was what, 300 feet?"

Short on starting pitching with Luis Severino, James Paxton and CC Sabathia on the injured list, New York used Chad Green as an opener for the third time, and he struck out the side in a perfect first as Machado swung under a slider.

"That's overpowering, dominating Greeny when he's at his best," Boone said. "He set the tone."

David Hale (1-0) allowed RBI doubles by Josh Naylor and Austin Hedges in the second, then started pitching more quickly and retired his last 10 batters for his first win since September 2015 with Colorado.

"It's felt like a while," Hale said.

Adam Ottavino, Tommy Kahnle, Zack Britton and Aroldis Chapman followed with an inning each, combining for three-hit relief in a six-hitter. Chapman got his 15th save in 16 chances.

"It's borderline textbook, six, seven, eight, nine, what they're going to," Padres manager Andy Green said.

San Diego lost its second straight following a five-game winning streak. At 27 the oldest starter in a young rotation, Strahm entered with eight straight outings allowing two runs or fewer. He gave up four hits and three walks.

"I didn't have my changeup but I made the adjustment and finished strong," Strahm said.

SLUGGING

Frazier has four homers and 10 RBI in seven games after getting one RBI in his first 10 games following a sprained ankle. He made a mechanical adjustment after seeing a fan video posted on Instagram by koid24 on Instagram of an at-bat against Boston's Heath Hembree on April 17, even though Frazier took a called third strike.

"Just the swivel of my hand, If you see the circular movement that I'm repeating in the box. I'm trying to have that as done as early as I can before the pitcher comes at me. It helps my pitch recognition somehow," he said. "Kind of just like a `dig-me' video that I saw."

STREAKING

New York is trying to win nine straight series for the first time since 1998. San Diego has lost six straight games in the Bronx dating to 2004.

SEATS

A crowd of 46,254 was just New York's second home sellout.

TRAINER'S ROOM

Padres: INF Fernando Tatis Jr. (strained left hamstring) is hitting at extended spring training, and San Diego will decide in the next few days whether he needs a minor league rehab assignment. ... RF Franmil Reyes returned after missing two games with an injured shoulder sustained on a checked swing Friday. He allowed Cameron Maybin's eighth-inning single to skip off his glove for an error as Gleyber Torres scored.

Yankees: After going 2 for 7 with a home run in two games for Class A Tampa, SS Didi Gregorius is set to move to Triple-A Scranton/Wilkes-Barre on Tuesday as he nears a return from Tommy John surgery. ... Paxton (left knee inflammation) was cleared to pitch and could start Wednesday or Thursday in his first appearance since May 3. ... Sabathia (fluid drained from right knee) could start Sunday's series finale against Boston. ... Severino (right rotator cuff inflammation, strained lat muscle) planned to throw off flat ground Tuesday for the first time since April 6. ... RHP Dellin Betances (right shoulder impingement) threw off a mound for the first time since March 17, a 20-fastball bullpen session.

UP NEXT

RHP Masahiro Tanaka (3-3) has allowed one run or none in three straight starts going into Tuesday's outing for the Yankees against San Diego LHP Eric Lauer (3-4).

Fans chant 'MVP' after Bellinger's 2 assists, HR

Published in Baseball
Tuesday, 28 May 2019 00:23

LOS ANGELES -- Dave Roberts was asked if he had ever experienced anything resembling the day-to-day, all-encompassing dominance that Cody Bellinger has exhibited through these first couple of months and started searching. He's in his fourth season as the Los Angeles Dodgers' manager and his ninth overall as a coach, following a well-traveled, 10-year career as a player.

But Roberts couldn't find any comps from personal experience. He instead looked to the team that plays 30 miles down the road and summoned Mike Trout, and all that represents.

"You have to be careful when you're talking about Mike Trout, because that's longevity too," Roberts said after the Dodgers' Bellinger-inspired 9-5 victory over the New York Mets on Memorial Day. "But for a two-month span, that's kind of what you're talking about."

Bellinger recorded two outfield assists and homered in what became the Dodgers' fourth consecutive victory, coming about as close as one can in this sport to singlehandedly affecting the outcome of a game.

When the Mets were pounding Clayton Kershaw in the first inning, he thwarted a rally by throwing Michael Conforto out at home plate. And when the Mets were threatening late -- loading the bases with out in the eighth, bringing the go-ahead run to the plate and forcing Kenley Jansen to attempt his first five-out save of the season -- Bellinger gunned Carlos Gomez down at third base with an on-line bullet that never hit the ground.

"If the throw isn't perfect and the ball hits me, the game's going to be 8-7 with a runner on second," Gomez said. "For me, if I'm on second again, I go to third -- a hundred times."

Bellinger's solo home run in the third -- a 440-foot, 111.6-mph drive to right field -- gave him 19 for the season, second only to Christian Yelich's 21. His two outfield assists gave him seven, more than any other player in the National League. The Dodgers have played exactly one third of the season, and Bellinger has already produced a major league-best 4.3 FanGraphs wins above replacement, a total that only 31 position players reached through the entirety of 2018.

Then there's this, from the Elias Sports Bureau: Bellinger is the third player in major league history to accumulate 19 home runs and seven outfield assists through his first 52 games of a season, joining Babe Ruth (1932) and Chuck Klein (1930).

"Superlatives are becoming tough to come by," Roberts said of Bellinger, who easily leads the majors in batting average (.383) and OPS (1.229).

A Dodger Stadium crowd of 47,816 serenaded Bellinger with "MVP" chants when he came to bat in the bottom half of the eighth.

"It was cool," Bellinger said. "I stepped out for a second because it got in my head a little bit."

Bellinger, 23, always projected as a high-average hitter. He had an innate feel for the strike zone, an easy swing, and eventually, evaluators believed, the power would emerge. His athleticism was too obvious to ignore.

But few could have predicted that he would turn into an elite outfielder so quickly. Bellinger had barely played center field when the 2018 season began, but he moved there on a part-time basis to free up at-bats for Max Muncy and quickly became the team's best defensive option at the position. Muncy's excellence and A.J. Pollock's arrival in 2019 prompted Bellinger to take over as the everyday right fielder, a position he hardly knew.

But Bellinger expressed confidence early on that the experience gained from spring training would quickly make him comfortable. He became excited about the possibility of locking down his own position and was intrigued by the thought of playing in a spot where he could show off his underrated arm strength.

On Monday, in a seesaw game that was quickly starting to slip away, Bellinger did so emphatically.

The first came after Kershaw had allowed three of the first four batters to reach. Todd Frazier snuck a slow roller through the right side in the top of the first that Conforto tried to score on from second base. Bellinger charged it calmly, gathered himself, and threw to the left of Dodgers catcher Russell Martin, who did a nice job of applying the tag to record the second out. The Mets didn't score again that inning.

After the second, off a fly ball from J.D. Davis, Bellinger became incredulous -- eyes wide, mouth agape, arms stretched out as he looked towards center fielder Alex Verdugo and jogged to his dugout. The final out of the eighth, confirmed by replay, occurred a split-second before the Mets' sixth run could score and ultimately altered the course of an entire game.

"The mentality was just throw it as hard as I could," Bellinger said. "I didn't think I had a chance at home, so I just set my sights to third and just tried to throw it accurate."

Statcast metrics were unavailable on Monday, but Roberts estimated that Bellinger's throw traveled at least 300 feet through the air.

"I don't know if they give out Gold Gloves in May," Roberts said, "but it's hard to see it play out any other way."

After the win, which improved the Dodgers' record to 36-18, Kershaw thought of other Dodgers position players who have dominated in similar fashion. He brought up Manny Ramirez's scorching run down the stretch in 2008, Matt Kemp's near-MVP season in 2011 and some impressive showings by Andre Ethier along the way.

"But this is really special," Kershaw said. "And he's doing everything."

Serena Williams survived a scare as she fought back to beat Russian world number 83 Vitalia Diatchenko in the French Open first round.

American Williams, who has been battling injury, showed rustiness in a poor first set filled with loose shots.

But the 23-time Grand Slam champion found her rhythm to claim 12 of the final 13 games and win 2-6 6-1 6-0 at Roland Garros in Paris.

Williams, 37, faces Japan's Kurumi Nara or Slovenian Dalila Jakupovic next.

"There is always a lot of fear for a first-round match," Williams said.

"I made lots of mistakes in the first set and I just said 'good luck, Serena'.

"I was strong after that. Now I feel like I need to go and practise."

From screams of frustration to a milestone

The women's draw at Roland Garros had already lost Wimbledon champion Angelique Kerber and former world number ones Caroline Wozniacki and Venus Williams to first-round defeats, while sixth seed Petra Kvitova pulled out injured.

It started to look like Williams' name would be added to the list of casualties.

Her season has been disrupted by a persistent knee injury and she was even pictured sat in a wheelchair - seemingly as a protective measure - on a trip to Disneyland Paris with her daughter Olympia last week.

The injury forced her to pull out of the Italian Open two weeks ago, meaning she had played only once on clay since last year's Roland Garros.

Since losing to Karolina Pliskova in the Australian Open quarter-finals in January, Williams has played in only three tournaments - Indian Wells, Miami and Rome - and has withdrawn from all of them.

So it was unsurprising to see the 10th seed make 14 unforced errors in the opening set against 28-year-old Diatchenko.

Loud screams of frustration at the start of the second set seemed to have a cathartic effect, with Williams finding her stride soon after.

The three-time French Open champion, who is aiming to equal Margaret Court's record of 24 Grand Slam singles titles, hit 20 winners in the final two sets as she increased the intensity against a rapidly wilting Diatchenko.

In the end it was a procession to an 800th victory in the main draw of a tournament as Williams became the first woman to reach the milestone.

The catsuit was banned - so what did she wear?

Williams was banned from wearing the black catsuit outfit she donned at last year's French Open, with the tournament introducing a stricter dress code.

She said the outfit made her feel like a "superhero" and that it helped with the issue of blood clots, which she said almost cost her her life giving birth.

She answered the 'what will she wear?' question when she arrived on Philippe Chatrier wearing a black and white striped cape emblazoned with the words 'mother, champion, queen, goddess'.

"It was just to remind everyone that they can be champions and are queens. So I love that about it," she said.

"It is a lot to carry, but so is being Serena Williams."

That was just for the warm-up, after which she revealed an abstract outfit in the same colours, which looked like floating shorts and a crop top but which also had a mesh panel around the torso.

Even then she was not finished with the outfit changes, later pulling on a - remarkably plain - long-sleeved top.

British number one Kyle Edmund's French Open first-round match with Frenchman Jeremy Chardy was suspended deep in the final set because of bad light.

The match was halted with the score at 7-6 (7-1) 5-7 6-4 4-6 5-5 after four hours of play at Roland Garros in Paris.

There were boos from the crowd when the decision was made to resume on Tuesday.

Edmund, 24, was a set and a break up before he was pegged back by the world number 41.

Edmund has reached the second round in each of his past four appearances at the French Open.

Compatriots Cameron Norrie and Dan Evans will play their first-round matches on Tuesday.

Earlier on Monday, British women's number one Johanna Konta beat German world number 147 Antonia Lottner 6-4 6-4 to reach the second round for the first time in her career.

McMillen Thinks A Win Is Coming In Joliet

Published in Racing
Monday, 27 May 2019 11:02

JOLIET, Ill. – Terry McMillen sees his recent struggles at the past two NHRA Mello Yello Drag Racing Series races as a minor roadblock for what he believes will be another productive season.

He also thinks his team is due for its first win of the season and nothing would make the fan-favorite driver happier than to see it come at the 22nd annual Route 66 NHRA Nationals, which takes place May 30-June 2 at state-of-the-art Route 66 Raceway.

The Chicago-area native always has this race circled on his calendar, hoping to put together his third career victory and first at Route 66 Raceway in his 10,000-horsepower AMALIE Motor Oil XTERMIGATOR dragster. After a strong start to open his season, a win would also put McMillen and his team back on a good track heading to a rigorous four-race stretch.

“I still believe we are a win waiting to happen,” McMillen said. “It would be nice to get it where I grew up. I’m not going to lie, getting a win anywhere would be awesome, but Chicago is special. It’s a great facility and I’ve always had great times there. I’m pretty confident going into Chicago, but you could have a 16-car field with everyone in the 3.70s real easily. I think we’re in good shape and I’m hoping we move up in points. While the quality of Top Fuel cars is awesome and you look how close everybody is, we have a car with a lot of potential and can win on raceday.”

Clay Millican (Top Fuel), Robert Hight (Funny Car), Jeg Coughlin Jr. (Pro Stock) and Matt Smith (Pro Stock Motorcycle) were last year’s winners of the event. It is the ninth of 24 events during the NHRA season and with the opening day of the race starting with an exciting Friday Night On Fire, McMillen knows he’ll have to be in top form immediately.

Friday’s nitro sessions start at 9 p.m., which gives the standouts in Top Fuel and Funny Car a chance to perform under the lights. That means a field filled with quick runs, but McMillen and his team, led by crew chief Rob Wendland, feel like they have things in order after failing to qualify in Atlanta and falling in the first round on Sunday in Richmond. But McMillen is confident his team made significant progress over the weekend, which should pay dividends in Chicago.

“We want to have success right away in Chicago and that means rolling the car off the trailer and going down the track on the first pass,” McMillen said. “That sets the tone for the entire weekend and when we do those things, we get stronger. One thing I’ve always said is the more opportunities you give Rob Wendland to go down the racetrack, he’s going to figure it out and get down the track. Moving forward, we know what we need to do. Going into Chicago, I feel real confident that all the right parts and pieces are in place, and it’s just a matter of getting that first run in.”

Up to Atlanta, McMillen had performed well, advancing to a final round and a semifinal in the first six races. He believes those type of performances are about to return, even as McMillen, who is ninth in Top Fuel points, will face off with the likes of Millican, defending world champion Steve Torrence, who has won three straight races, Antron Brown, Richie Crampton, Doug Kalitta, Brittany Force and Leah Pritchett. His team has shown impressive resolve through this two-race hiccup, giving McMillen all the indication he needs to see when it comes to turning things around.

“What’s really exceptional with our team is, when there’s adversity, they work twice as hard,” McMillen said. “They’re doing their due diligence. I don’t think we really did bad (in Virginia). We know the changes we’ll make going forward. We haven’t seen the track temperatures in this car we saw in Virginia, so it’s just a matter of keep doing what we’re doing and it will turn around. We’re picking away at each area and it’s just a matter of getting to know our car a little better.”

PHOTOS: Xfinity Series Alsco 300

Published in Racing
Monday, 27 May 2019 12:00

VIDEO: McFadden Talks Deal To Drive KKR No. 9

Published in Racing
Monday, 27 May 2019 12:34

SPEED SPORT’s Jacob Seelman catches up with James McFadden, who is driving the Kasey Kahne Racing No. 9 in place of injured team owner and driver Kasey Kahne.

Pagenaud Latest To Join Indy 500 Winner’s Club

Published in Racing
Monday, 27 May 2019 13:30

INDIANAPOLIS – Simon Pagenaud is now a member of one of the most exclusive clubs on Earth and the only members of that club are winners of the Indianapolis 500.

Pagenaud became the latest member of that exclusive group when he scored his first Indianapolis 500 win in an epic battle to the finish during the 103rd Indianapolis 500 on Sunday at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

“Last night, Rick Mears was one of the first to text me, ‘Welcome to the club,’” Pagenaud said Monday at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, referring to the last four-time winner of the Indy 500. “Helio (Castroneves) obviously. T.K. (Tony Kanaan) when I left for the parade lap in the convertible at the end. Takuma (Sato) – they all texted me saying, ‘Welcome to the club.’

“I didn’t really get it then.”

The messages kept coming.

“Gil de Ferran last night was in tears, calling, sending me messages, ‘Welcome to the club.’ Again, Will Power. Dario Franchitti this morning sent me a message.

“It’s amazing, all these guys I looked up to, ‘Welcome to the club.’

“When you accomplish your dream, it’s phenomenal. It will be great, when I have kids, I can say, ‘Hey, I did this.’ When they have kids, ‘Hey, grandpa did whatever.”

“It’s just great to be able to think that.”

Pagenaud’s entry into the exclusive Indianapolis 500 winner’s club came after a long, hard battle with the fiercely determined Alexander Rossi over the final 13 laps of Sunday’s Indianapolis 500. The two drivers relentlessly traded the lead with some spectacular passes.

Pagenaud made the race-winning pass when he zoomed past Rossi’s Honda with one-and-a-half laps to go entering turn three.

He took the checkered flag just .2086-of-a-second ahead of Rossi. It was a long journey for the Team Penske driver to get there.

“In 2007, I really questioned my career,” Pagenaud recalled. “Champ Car folded, so I wasn’t really known in the IRL (Indy Racing League) paddock. When IndyCar formed, it was very difficult for me to have connection. People didn’t know my worth. I decided to try the sports car route. There seemed to be more opportunities for me there at the time.

“That’s when in April of 2008, I thought I was going to pack up and go back to France and do something else. Gil de Ferran called, and Honda came to the rescue with the Acura program.

“It’s quite fitting that I’m driving for them in sports cars, as well, now with Team Penske and Acura. It was a very tough time on my career because there were a lot of doubts. It wasn’t about talent. It wasn’t about anything else than having an opportunity and showing it in the car.

“I went to sports cars, did really well there. Then with the help of Honda, I came back to IndyCar with Sam Schmidt who gave me a real break. That was my real first break in IndyCar. Obviously, I did three races, Dreyer & Reinbold, Dennis gave me the opportunity to know what I could do. That opened the doors for the Honda deal with Sam Schmidt.

“It’s funny how things just take their place. After a few races, I was already in touch with Roger (Penske). That was my dream. It’s always been my dream to go to Team Penske. Certainly, my career with Sam, Honda really was a steppingstone going up and going to Team Penske.”

That is one reason why his conversation with de Ferran was so gratifying and emotional.

“I saw him before the race and was already really proud for the pole,” Pagenaud said. “He said, ‘Man, I’ve been watching. You’re the best out there. Go get it.’

“I had a lot of support from him throughout the years. He’s been a very important part of my improvement, my development as a driver.

“Without him, I don’t think I would have unlocked so much potential. So, he has definitely a very special place in my heart.

“I sent a message. I said, ‘Thank you for everything, all your advice worked.’”

Simon Pagenaud holds his head in his hand after winning the Indianapolis 500 Sunday afternoon. (Dave Heithaus Photo)

On Monday night, Pagenaud is expected to collect $2.5 million for his victory at the annual Indianapolis 500 Victory Awards Celebration at the JW Marriott.

“I’m looking forward to getting a Corvette,” Pagenaud said of the Pace Car, which is given annually to the Indianapolis 500 winner. “That’s pretty cool. I get a Corvette, wine color, burgundy. It was meant to be, I guess. I’m looking forward to that.

“I’m looking forward to celebrate with my peers tonight, see the car on stage. I think that’s going to be when I realize what’s happened. Look forward to going to New York tomorrow. We will see what we do there. I think there’s going to be quite a bit of attendance. I’m excited about that.

“My face on the trophy. Taking the trophy to France would be very special. That’s just because that’s where I was born. Obviously, it would be a special moment.”

Pagenaud hasn’t stopped celebrating since he stopped at the Yard of Bricks instead of victory Llne at the end of the Indianapolis 500. He wanted to share the moment with the fans, rather than go to victory lane first.

It was his way of entering the Indianapolis 500 winner’s club.

“This place is mythical,” Pagenaud said of Indianapolis Motor Speedway. “When you win, you’re part of the history. I just feel super honored. It doesn’t feel real because I don’t hold myself up high like that, I don’t believe in myself as somebody special. It doesn’t feel right to say it even.

“Quite frankly, I’m not quite done with my career. I just turned 35. I have more than a decade ahead of me. So, I’ll be here for a while.”

Blues' Dunn out for Game 1 but Thomas to play

Published in Hockey
Monday, 27 May 2019 10:12

St. Louis Blues defenseman Vince Dunn will not play Monday night in Game 1 of the Stanley Cup Final because of an upper-body injury.

Blues coach Craig Berube also announced that rookie forward Robert Thomas, who is dealing with an undisclosed injury, will play Monday night against the Bruins.

This will be Dunn's fourth straight game missed with the injury after he took a puck to the face in Game 3 of the Western Conference final.

Berube said Dunn is still considered day-to-day but that he is close to a return. Dunn practiced Monday for the third consecutive day and shed the full face shield he skated with over the weekend in favor of a regular visor.

Asked if Dunn was talking better, captain Alex Pietrangelo joked, "Yeah, his teeth are coming in.''

Dunn had 12 goals and 23 assists this season with a plus/minus of 14. He has two goals and five assists this postseason with a plus/minus of minus-3.

Thomas, 19, had nine goals and 24 assists during the regular season and has a goal and five assists in the postseason.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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